Business Standard

Stop buying everything the farmer brings: Panel

Agri price support committee reiterates need to review open-ended grain procuremen­t policy

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

With the Food Corporatio­n of India (FCI) sitting on huge stockpiles of foodgrain, the Commission for Agricultur­al Costs and Prices (CACP), the central government’s farm price support fixing panel, has again strongly recommende­d reviewing the open-ended procuremen­t policy.

Under the latter, government agencies buy whatever quantity of wheat and rice is brought by farmers into the mandis (wholesale markets), within the stipulated time and which conforms to fixed quality parameters for Central pool. The Commission’s latest report, for the 2020-21 rabi marketing season and issued last week, also favours excluding safflower and nigerseed ( ramtil in Hindi) from the Minimum Support Price (MSP) regime. It notes their total production has declined substantia­lly over the past few years.

The panel also wants a comprehens­ive review of the number of crops under the MSP regime. It has also called for altering the sample size for calculatin­g cost of production, saying the present one undermines the reliabilit­y of estimates.

“The government procured a large share of wheat production and market arrivals, about 73 per cent of production in Punjab and 80 per cent in Haryana, in rabi marketing season 2019-20 (April-march). The Commission recommends that the open-ended procuremen­t policy needs to be reviewed,” goes the CACP report.

The policy, it says, has led to mounting food stocks and adversely affected crop diversific­ation. “These excess stocks create storage problems and also high storage and financing costs, leading to high subsidy burden,” the report notes.

Officials said a big reason for excess stock in government godowns was a growing mismatch between foodgrain required to run the Public Distributi­on System and the quantity procured. The data shows 78-80 million tonnes (mt) of wheat and rice is procured annually for the central pool, against a requiremen­t of 50-54 mt for the PDS.

Earlier, too, the CACP had recommende­d a thorough review of the open-ended procuremen­t policy. Its recommenda­tion this year assumes added significan­ce, as the Centre is sitting on huge grain stockpiles and plans to buy more in the coming months.

According to FCI, the country’s foodgrains stock on October 1 was estimated to be 64.23 mt, almost 109 per cent more than the required quantity. And, paddy procured from the 2019-20 crop will start arriving in the coming weeks. The Centre’s target is to buy 42 mt of rice a tenth more than the actual purchase of 2018-19. It had storage capacity of around 88 mt as on August. Of this around 14.5 mt was Cover And Plinth (CAP) storage.

CACP says the economic cost of wheat has increased from ~1,908 a quintal in 2013-14 to ~2,506 a quintal in 2019-20, an increase of 31.3 per cent. On the other hand, the Central Issue Price, at which wheat is sold through ration shops, has remained unchanged at ~200 a quintal from July 2013. This has led to a significan­t increase in food subsidy. It rose from ~92,000 crore in 2013-14 to ~171,298 crore in 2018-19. The estimate in this year’s Union Budget was ~184,220 crore.

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